'\" t
.TH WY60 1 "Feb 02, 2007"
.SH NAME
wy60 \- curses based emulator for the Wyse 60\*(Tm terminal
.SH SYNOPSIS
.TP
.B wy60
[\ \fB-c\fP\ |\ \fB--command\fP\ \fIcommand\fP\ ] [\ \fB-h\fP\ |\ \fB--help\fP\ ] [\ \fB-j\fP\ |\ \fB--job-control\fP\ {\ \fBon\fP\ |\ \fBoff\fP\ }\ ] [\ \fB-l\fP\ |\ \fB--login\fP\ ] [\ \fB-o\fP\ |\ \fB--option\fP\ \fIkey\fP\fB=\fP\fIvalue\fP\ ] [\ \fB-t\fP\ |\ \fB--term\fP\ \fIterminal\fP\ ] [\ \fB-v\fP\ |\ \fB--version\fP\ ] [\ \fB--\fP\ ] \fIshell\ arguments\fP
.SH DESCRIPTION
The
.B wy60
utility program invokes a new shell or
.I command
and adjusts the
.B $TERM
environment variable to have a value of
.IR wyse60 .
All commands executed within this shell or any of its child processes
automatically have their terminal escape sequences translated to be
processed by the terminal that
.B wy60
was invoked from.
.P
Unless a different
.I command
was requested, the user's default shell as determined by the value of the
.B $SHELL
environment variable is invoked. If the environment variable has not been set,
then the default system shell
.I /bin/sh
is used instead. This value can be overridden in the configuration file.
.SH OPTIONS
Parameters are parsed until the first unknown parameter is encountered, or
until the special parameter
.B --
is found. All the following parameters are passed on to the inferior shell or
to the user specified
.IR command .
Check the manual page for
.BR sh (1)
for a detailed list of options.
.P
The following parameters are directly understood by
.B wy60
and will not be forwarded to any child process unless they appear after
the
.B --
marker or after another set of unknown parameters:
.TP \w'\-c\ |\ 'u
\fB-c\fP\ |\ \fB--command\fP\ \fIcommand\fP
Rather than invoking the user's shell, run the specified
.IR command ,
instead.
.TP
\fB-h\fP\ |\ \fB--help\fP
Display a brief usage message showing the valid command line parameters.
.TP
\fB-j\fP\ |\ \fB--job-control\fP\ {\ \fBon\fP\ |\ \fBoff\fP\ }
Enable or disable job control. If the parent process is a shell that supports
job control then
.B wy60
can enable this capability for its children by forking an additional
process monitoring the children. By default, this option is enabled.
.TP
\fB-l\fP\ |\ \fB--login\fP
Invoke the inferior shell as a login shell. This is done by prepending a
minus character to the application name. This convention is supported by
all shells but probably gets ignored by most other applications. The
.B --login
parameter is ignored if the
.B --command
parameter has also been given.

As a special case, it is possible to make
.B wy60
a user's default login shell. To do so,
.B wy60
must be entered into the
.BR shells (5)
file and you must call
.BR chsh (1)
to change the user's default shell. If the emulator detects that it is invoked
as a wrapper for a shell, it ignores all command line parameters. It then
resets
.B $SHELL
to the value specified in the configuration file or to
.I /bin/sh
and launches that shell passing all the parameters that were given to
.BR wy60 .
.TP
\fB-o\fP\ |\ \fB--option\fP\ \fIkey\fP\fB=\fP\fIvalue\fP
All of the configuration variables listed later in this document can also be
overriden on the command line. The syntax is identical to the one used in the
configuration files.

When using this option, it might be neccessary to quote the key/value pair to
prevent the shell from expanding escape sequences.
.TP
\fB-t\fP\ |\ \fB--term\fP\ \fIterminal\fP
Override the value of the
.B $TERM
environment variable. If this parameter is not present, then a default of
.I wyse60
will be used for the value that is passed to the inferior shell.
.TP
\fB-v\fP\ |\ \fB--version\fP
Display the version number of the program and the date when it was compiled.
.TP
\fB--\fP
All parameters following this argument will be literally passed to the
inferior shell.
.SH EXAMPLES
.TP \w'wy60\ 'u
.B wy60
If invoked without parameters, an interactive shell is invoked.
.TP
.B wy60 \-c emacs \-nw README
The
.B \-c
parameter can be used to directly invoke an interactive application that should
run in an emulated environment. The emulator will terminate when the invoked
application has quit.
.TP
.B wy60 \-c infocmp
Use
.BR infocmp (1M)
to verify that the
.BR terminfo (5)
database has appropriate entries for the emulated
.I wyse60
terminal.
.TP
.B TERM=xterm-mono wy60
By default,
.B wy60
uses colors instead of text attributes if available. If you prefer seeing
traditional text attributes instead, start
.B wy60
in a terminal that does not support ANSI colors.
.SH CONFIGURATION FILES
Some of the execution parameters can be controlled through configuration
files. Every user can have a private configuration file in
.I $HOME/.wy60rc
that overrides any system-wide settings. The system administrator can also
set global parameters in
.IR @SYSCONFDIR@/wy60.rc
or in
.IR /etc/wy60.rc .
.P
All configuration files are in plain ASCII format. Comments are introduced by
the hash mark
.B #
character and extend to the end of the line. Blank lines are ignored. All
lines are of the form
.BR "variable = value" .
Variable names are case insensitive. Leading and trailing white space for both
the variables and the values is stripped prior to processing. Non ASCII
characters have to be escaped:
.TP 6
.BI \e ooo
Up to three octal digits can be used to specify a character in the range
.B \e001
through
.BR \e177 .
.TP
.BI \ex XX
Up to two hexadecimal digits can be used to specify a character in the range
.B \ex01
through
.BR \exFF .
.TP
.B \ea
The
.B BEL
character (ASCII 7).
.TP
.B \eb
The
.B BS
character (ASCII 8).
.TP
.B \ee
The
.B ESC
character (ASCII 27).
.TP
.B \ef
The
.B FF
character (ASCII 12).
.TP
.B \en
The
.B NL
character (ASCII 10).
.TP
.B \er
The
.B CR
character (ASCII 13).
.TP
.B \et
The
.B TAB
character (ASCII 9).
.TP
.B \ev
The
.B VT
character (ASCII 11).
.P
Please note that continuation lines are not supported and that is not
possible to input a
.B NUL
character (ASCII 0).
.P
The configuration file supports the following parameters:
.TP \w'RESIZE\ \ \ \ 'u
.B IDENTIFIER
The terminal identifier string that is reported when an
.I ENQ
(ASCII 5) is received, can be overridden by setting the
.B IDENTIFIER
configuration variable. If this option is not set, then the emulator replies
with an
.I ACK
(ASCII 6).
.TP
.B PRINTCOMMAND
Programs can print to a local printer by sending escape codes to
.BR wy60 .
If this variable is set to "\fIauto\fP" then
.B wy60
will try to print to either
.BR lp (1)
or to
.BR lpr (1).
Otherwise, this variable should contain the name of a script that can
accept data on its standard input.
.TP
.B RESIZE
If you want to use an external script to resize the console, then you can
specify the absolute path to this script by setting the
.B RESIZE
configuration variable. For example, if you have
.BR SVGATextMode (8)
installed and you want to run
.B wy60
from the Linux text console, then you might try using a script such as
this one:
.ft CW
.TS
;
l.
#!/bin/sh
PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin
egrep '.+' /proc/fb >&2 && exit 0
(tty <&3 | egrep '^/dev/tty[0-9]*$' >&2) 3<&1
if test "$?" -eq 0; then
  SVGATextMode "$1x$2"   <&1 >&2 ||
  SVGATextMode "$1x$2x9" <&1 >&2 ||
  SVGATextMode "$1x$2x8" <&1 >&2
fi
exit 0
.TE
.ft R
Make sure that
.BR SVGATextMode (8)
understands these modes: 80x24, 80x25, 80x42, 80x43, 132x24, 132x25, 132x42,
132x43.
.TP
.B SHELL
If neither a
.I command
has been passed on the command line, nor the user's
.B $SHELL
environment variable was set, then use this variable to determine the
default shell. If the variable is not set, then a value of
.I /bin/sh
is used instead.
.TP
.B TERM
If no
.I terminal
type has been specified on the command line, the program defaults to
.IR wyse60 .
This default value can by overridden by setting the
.B TERM
configuration variable.
.TP
.B WRITEPROTECT
The default attribute for indicating write-protect mode is
.IR REVERSE .
This value can be overridden by setting the
.B WRITEPROTECT
configuration variable to one of these values:
.IR NORMAL ,\  BLANK ,\  BLINK ,\  REVERSE ,\  UNDERSCORE ,\  DIM .
The attributes can be combined with each other by listing multiple in the
same line.
.P
All the other variables specify character sequences that should be sent
whenever the user presses a function key. The following table lists the
variable name, the default value, and the
.BR terminfo (5)
name for the function key.
.P
.TS
center ;
l l l
l l l.
\fBVariable Name\fP	\fBDefault Key Sequence\fP	\fBTerminfo Name\fP
A1		ka1
A3		ka3
B2		kb2
C1		kc1
C3		kc2
Backspace	\eb	kbs
Backtab	\eeI	kcbt
Begin		kbeg
Cancel		kcan
Clear		kclr
Clear All Tabs		ktbc
Clear Tab		kctab
Close		kclo
Command		kcmd
Copy		kcpy
Create		kcrt
Delete	\eeW	kdch1
Delete Line	\eeR	kdl1
Down	\en	kcud1
End	\eeT	kend
End Of Line	\eeY	kel
End Of Screen	\eeT	ked
Enter	\ee7	kent
Exit		kext
Exit Insert Mode		krmir
Find		kfnd
Help		khlp
Home	\ex1E	khome
Insert	\eeE	kich1
Insert Line	\eeQ	kil1
Left	\eb	kcub1
Lower Left		kll
Mark		kmrk
Message		kmsg
Move		kmov
Next	\eeK	knxt
Open		kopn
Options		kopt
Page Down	\eeK	knp
Page Up	\eeJ	kpp
Previous	\eeJ	kprv
Print	\eeP	kprt
Redo		krdo
Reference		kref
Refresh		krfr
Replace	\eer	krpl
Restart		krst
Resume		kres
Right	\ef	kcuf1
Save		ksav
Scroll Down		kind
Scroll Up		kri
Select		kslt
Set Tab		khts
Suspend	\ex1A	kspd
Undo		kund
Up	\ev	kcuu1
Shift Begin		kBEG
Shift Cancel		kCAN
Shift Command		kCMD
Shift Copy		kCPY
Shift Create		kCRT
Shift Delete	\eeW	kDC
Shift Delete Line	\eeR	kDL
Shift End	\eeT	kEND
Shift End Of Line	\eeT	kEOL
Shift Exit		kEXT
Shift Find		kFND
Shift Help		kHLP
Shift Home	\ee{	kHOM
Shift Insert	\eeQ	kIC
Shift Left	\eb	kLFT
Shift Message		kMSG
Shift Move		kMOV
Shift Next	\eeK	kNXT
Shift Options		kOPT
Shift Previous	\eeJ	kPRV
Shift Print	\eeP	kPRT
Shift Redo		kRDO
Shift Replace	\eer	kRPL
Shift Resume		kRES
Shift Right	\ef	kRIT
Shift Save		kSAV
Shift Suspend		kSPD
Shift Undo		kUND
F0		kf0
F1	\e001@\er	kf1
F2	\e001A\er	kf2
F3	\e001B\er	kf3
F4	\e001C\er	kf4
F5	\e001D\er	kf5
F6	\e001E\er	kf6
F7	\e001F\er	kf7
F8	\e001G\er	kf8
F9	\e001H\er	kf9
F10	\e001I\er	kf10
F11	\e001J\er	kf11
F12	\e001K\er	kf12
F13	\e001`\er	kf13
F14	\e001a\er	kf14
F15	\e001b\er	kf15
F16	\e001c\er	kf16
F17	\e001d\er	kf17
F18	\e001e\er	kf18
F19	\e001f\er	kf19
F20	\e001g\er	kf20
F21	\e001h\er	kf21
F22	\e001i\er	kf22
F23	\e001j\er	kf23
F24	\e001k\er	kf24
F25	\e001L\er	kf25
F26	\e001M\er	kf26
F27	\e001N\er	kf27
F28	\e001O\er	kf28
F29	\e001l\er	kf29
F30	\e001m\er	kf30
F31	\e001n\er	kf31
F32	\e001o\er	kf32
F33		kf33
F34		kf34
F35		kf35
F36		kf36
F37		kf37
F38		kf38
F39		kf39
F40		kf40
F41		kf41
F42		kf42
F43		kf43
F44		kf44
F45		kf45
F46		kf46
F47		kf47
F48		kf48
F49		kf49
F50		kf50
F51		kf51
F52		kf52
F53		kf53
F54		kf54
F55		kf55
F56		kf56
F57		kf57
F58		kf58
F59		kf59
F60		kf60
F61		kf61
F62		kf62
F63		kf63
Alt a	\eea
Alt b	\eeb
Alt c	\eec
Alt d	\eed
Alt e	\eee
Alt f	\eef
Alt g	\eeg
Alt h	\eeh
Alt i	\eei
Alt j	\eej
Alt k	\eek
Alt l	\eel
Alt m	\eem
Alt n	\een
Alt o	\eeo
Alt p	\eep
Alt q	\eeq
Alt r	\eer
Alt s	\ees
Alt t	\eet
Alt u	\eeu
Alt v	\eev
Alt w	\eew
Alt x	\eex
Alt y	\eey
Alt z	\eez
Alt A	\eeA
Alt B	\eeB
Alt C	\eeC
Alt D	\eeD
Alt E	\eeE
Alt F	\eeF
Alt G	\eeG
Alt H	\eeH
Alt I	\eeI
Alt J	\eeJ
Alt K	\eeK
Alt L	\eeL
Alt M	\eeM
Alt N	\eeN
Alt O	\eeO
Alt P	\eeP
Alt Q	\eeQ
Alt R	\eeR
Alt S	\eeS
Alt T	\eeT
Alt U	\eeU
Alt V	\eeV
Alt W	\eeW
Alt X	\eeX
Alt Y	\eeY
Alt Z	\eeZ
Alt 0	\ee0
Alt 1	\ee1
Alt 2	\ee2
Alt 3	\ee3
Alt 4	\ee4
Alt 5	\ee5
Alt 6	\ee6
Alt 7	\ee7
Alt 8	\ee8
Alt 9	\ee9
Alt Space	\ee\ex20
Alt Exclamation	\ee!
Alt Double Quote	\ee"
Alt Pound	\ee#
Alt Dollar	\ee$
Alt Percent	\ee%
Alt Ampersand	\ee&
Alt Single Quote	\ee'
Alt Left Paren	\ee(
Alt Right Paren	\ee)
Alt Asterisk	\ee*
Alt Plus	\ee+
Alt Comma	\ee,
Alt Dash	\ee-
Alt Period	\ee.
Alt Slash	\ee/
Alt Colon	\ee:
Alt Semicolon	\ee;
Alt Less	\ee<
Alt Equals	\ee=
Alt Greater	\ee>
Alt Question	\ee?
Alt At	\ee@
Alt Left Bracket	\ee[
Alt Backslash	\ee\e\e
Alt Right Bracket	\ee]
Alt Circumflex	\ee^
Alt Underscore	\ee_
Alt Backtick	\ee`
Alt Left Brace	\ee{
Alt Pipe	\ee|
Alt Right Brace	\ee}
Alt Tilde	\ee~
Alt Backspace	\ee\ex7F
.TE
.P
Not all of these keys are necessarily available on all types of terminals.
This is particularly true for the keys with the
.B Alt
modifier, which assume that the terminal precedes all characters with an
.B ESC
character if
.B Alt
is pressed.
.P
.SH EXIT STATUS
.TP
.B 0
Successful program execution.
.TP
.B 125
The inferior shell or
.I command
terminated abnormally.
.TP
.B 126
The emulator has been terminated by an unexpected signal.
.TP
.B 127
Some fatal error prevented or aborted the execution of
.BR wy60 .
.TP
.I Other
The inferior shell or
.I command
returned a non-zero exit status.
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
The most common cause for the emulator to fail is the
.B $TERM
environment variable not being set or the terminal having insufficient
capabilities. If this happens, try using a more powerful terminal type and
also use
.BR infocmp (1M)
to verify that your
.BR terminfo (5)
database is configured correctly.
.P
You might also see an error message saying that the terminal size could
not be determined.
.B wy60
requires that the terminal settings have been configured properly prior to
invoking the emulator. This usually happens at the time when you log into
the system, but you can also adjust the values by calling
.BR stty (1).
.P
If the emulator complains that it cannot launch the child process then
verify that
.B $SHELL
is set and points to a valid shell.
.SH FILES
.TP 24
.I $HOME/.wy60rc
Per-user configuration settings.
.TP
.I @SYSCONFDIR@/wy60.rc
System-wide configuration settings.
.TP
.I /etc/wy60.rc
System-wide configuration settings (this file must be created manually and
does not get overwritten when upgrading
.BR wy60 ).
.TP
.I /usr/share/terminfo/?/*
Files containing terminal descriptions.
.SH ENVIRONMENT
The
.B $TERM
environment variable must be set for the emulator to work. If the
.B $SHELL
environment variable is set, its value will be used for launching the
inferior shell. Otherwise a default filename is taken from the configuration
files or
.I /bin/sh
is used.
.P
The emulator sets the
.BR $TERM ", " $COLUMNS ", and " $LINES
environment variables for its child processes.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR chsh (1),
.BR infocmp (1M),
.BR lp (1),
.BR lpr (1),
.BR sh (1),
.BR shells (5),
.BR stty (1),
.BR SVGATextMode (8),
.BR terminfo (5),
.BR tput (1),
.BR xterm (1).
.SH SECURITY
The program can be executed with normal user privileges. As such, the amount
of damage that a malicious application could cause is limited to the user's
account. To the best of the author's knowledge the current version of
.B wy60
does not
have any security issues, but common sense should still be used whenever
running any untrusted software within the emulator.
.SH AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by Markus Gutschke
.RI < "markus+wy60@wy60.gutschke.com" >.
.P
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
.P
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
.P
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
.SH "MAILING LIST"
There is a low-traffic mailing list for the discussion of this program at
.UR http://gutschke.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/Wy60
.IR http://gutschke.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/Wy60 .
.UE
.SH TRADEMARKS
.I Wyse
and
.I Wyse 60
are trademarks or registered trademarks of
.IR "Wyse Technology, Inc" .
.SH BUGS
The emulator attempts to seamlessly switch to
.I wyse60
emulation. This requires the ability to query the host terminal for its
cursor position at the time when the emulator is started. As
.BR terminfo (5)
does not provide this capability,
.B wy60
can only support seamless switching on a small number of well known terminal
types. If it does not recognize the terminal type, then the screen will be
cleared at startup.
.P
The escape sequences for setting the screen size can only be processed if
the host terminal supports dynamic resizing under program control. Currently,
.BR xterm (1)
appears to be the only program that has this capability.
.P
Function keys work only if the host terminal generates distinct character
sequences for each of them and if the
.BR terminfo (5)
entry for the host terminal is correct. Frequently one or the other is not
the case which limits the usability of the emulator. Testing has shown, that
the most correct implementation appears to be available in very recent
versions of
.BR xterm (1).
.P
The current version of the emulator supports only a small subset of the
full features offered by a real
.I Wyse 60\*(Tm
terminal. Several of the advanced features are missing. Most notably this
means that there is no support for reprogrammable function keys (but you can
use the configuration file to assign strings to individual keys) or for the
status bar. Frequently, the supported set of escape sequences is sufficient to
run an application within the emulated environment, but if that does not work,
you should consider either filing a detailed bug report with the author or
you should switch to using a hardware terminal.
